Planning Guide
April 10, 2025 Β· 7 min read
The Best Kitchen Layouts for Southwest Florida Homes: A Complete Planning Guide
Your kitchen layout determines everything β how you cook, how you entertain, how the space flows. In Southwest Florida, where open-concept living and indoor-outdoor entertaining are the norm, choosing the right layout is especially important.
Why Layout Matters More Than You Think
Most homeowners focus on cabinets, countertops, and finishes first. But the layout is the foundation everything else sits on. A stunning kitchen with a bad layout will frustrate you every single day. A well-planned layout with mid-range finishes will feel like a dream.
In our Venice showroom, we always start with layout planning before discussing materials. Here's what we recommend for the most common home styles across Venice, Sarasota, and North Port.
The 5 Most Popular Kitchen Layouts
1. L-Shaped Kitchen
Two adjacent walls of cabinets forming an "L." This is the most popular layout we install across Southwest Florida, and for good reason β it works beautifully in open-concept floor plans, which dominate Florida home design.
- Best for: Open-concept homes, medium to large kitchens, entertaining
- Why it works in Florida: Leaves one or two walls open, maintaining the airy, connected feel Florida homeowners love. Pairs perfectly with a breakfast bar or island.
- Add an island? Absolutely. An L-shaped kitchen with island is our single most-requested design in Sarasota and Venice.
2. U-Shaped Kitchen
Cabinets on three walls, wrapping around you. Maximum storage and counter space in a compact footprint.
- Best for: Serious home cooks, families who need lots of storage, enclosed kitchen spaces
- Why it works in Florida: Many older Florida ranch homes have enclosed kitchens. A U-shape maximizes every inch without needing to knock down walls.
- Watch out for: Can feel closed-in if the space is too narrow. We recommend at least 8 feet between opposite counters for comfortable movement.
The Work Triangle Still Matters
Refrigerator, sink, and stove should form a triangle with sides between 4 and 9 feet each. This isn't just a design rule β it's the difference between a kitchen that flows naturally and one where you're constantly walking back and forth.
3. Galley Kitchen
Two parallel runs of cabinets with a walkway in between. Don't dismiss this layout β professional chefs prefer it for a reason.
- Best for: Smaller homes, condos, efficiency-focused cooks
- Why it works in Florida: Many Gulf Coast condos and bungalows in Venice and Siesta Key have galley kitchens. With the right design, they're incredibly functional and can look stunning.
- Pro move: Light-colored cabinets, under-cabinet lighting, and reflective backsplash materials make a galley kitchen feel twice its size.
4. Kitchen Island Layout
Any base layout (L-shaped, single wall) plus a freestanding island in the center. The island has become the heart of the modern Florida kitchen.
- Best for: Homes with open floor plans, families, entertainers
- Why it works in Florida: Florida living is social. The island creates a natural gathering spot where guests can sit while you cook β especially during football season and holiday entertaining.
- Minimum space needed: At least 42 inches of clearance on all sides of the island. We recommend 48 inches if the island includes seating.
5. Peninsula (G-Shaped) Kitchen
Like a U-shaped kitchen with one arm extending out as a peninsula β creating a partial island without needing a fully open floor plan.
- Best for: Kitchens that don't have room for a true island, homes where you want to separate the kitchen from the dining/living area without a wall
- Why it works in Florida: Gives you the island feel β bar seating, extra counter space β without requiring the square footage. Very popular in North Port and Englewood homes built in the 2000s.
Florida-Specific Layout Considerations
Beyond the basic shape, Southwest Florida homes have unique factors that affect your layout planning:
- Lanai access: If your kitchen opens to a screened lanai (and it probably does), plan the layout so the flow between indoor and outdoor spaces feels seamless. Don't block sliding door access with an oversized island.
- Natural light: Florida has incredible natural light. Position your primary work area near windows when possible. Avoid putting tall upper cabinets where they'll block Gulf-facing windows.
- Hurricane prep storage: Floridians know the drill. Smart layouts include a dedicated pantry or tall cabinet section for hurricane supplies β canned goods, water, flashlights β without cluttering your everyday kitchen storage.
- Outdoor kitchen connection: Many of our Sarasota and Venice clients have outdoor kitchens. Your indoor layout should complement β not duplicate β what you have outside.
Our #1 Layout Recommendation for Florida
For most Southwest Florida homes, an L-shaped kitchen with a multi-functional island is the sweet spot. It keeps the space open and airy, provides plenty of storage, creates a social gathering point, and leaves room for that all-important lanai access.
How to Choose the Right Layout for Your Home
Here's our simple process:
- Measure your space β We do this for you during a free in-home consultation.
- Define your priorities β More storage? Better flow? Entertaining space? A dedicated baking station?
- Consider your daily routine β Where do you put groceries down? How many people cook at once? Do kids do homework at the counter?
- See it in 3D β This is where it clicks. Our free 3D design shows you exactly how each layout option looks and feels in your actual space.
Not sure which layout fits your home? That's exactly what our free design consultation covers. We serve all of Venice, Sarasota, and North Port β and we'll come to your home to measure and design at no cost.
Get Your Free Kitchen Layout Design
We'll measure your space and design the perfect layout in 3D β so you can see exactly how your new kitchen will look and function before anything is built.
Book Free Layout Consultation β